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Adult brain
cells are Movers and Shakers
Newswise — It’s a
general belief that the circuitry of young
brains has robust flexibility but eventually
gets “hard-wired” in adulthood. As Johns
Hopkins researchers and their colleagues
report in the Nov. 8 issue of Neuron,
however, adult neurons aren’t quite as
rigidly glued in place as we suspect.
The investigators, led
by David Linden, Ph.D., professor of
neuroscience, took advantage of a new
technique known as two-photon microscopy
that let them literally see living neurons
going about their business in the intact
brain. The researchers injected fluorescent
dye into the brains of mice to light up a
subset of neurons and then viewed these
neurons through a window constructed in the
skull of living, anesthetized mice.
They examined neurons
that extend fibers (called axons) to send
signals to a brain region called the
cerebellum, which helps coordinate movements
and sensory information. Like a growing
tree, these axons have a primary trunk that
runs upward and several smaller branches
that sprout out to the sides.
But while the main
trunk was firmly connected to other target
neurons in the cerebellum, stationary as
adult axons are generally thought to be,
“the side branches swayed like kite tails in
the wind,” says Linden.
Over the course of a
few hours, individual side branches would
elongate, retract and morph in a highly
dynamic fashion. These side branches also
failed to make conventional connections, or
synapses, with adjacent neurons.
Furthermore, when a drug was given that
produced strong electrical currents in the
axons, the motion of the side branches
stalled.
Why the brain would
want such motile, non-connected branches is
the next mystery to tackle. Linden thinks
they may present a second mechanism for
conveying information beyond traditional
synapses or assist in nerve regeneration,
quickly forming synapses should nearby
nerves get damaged. “The ability to make
time-lapse movies of axons in the living
brain gives us a powerful tool to explore
axon regeneration that underlies neural
recovery following stroke or other brain
trauma,” Linden says.
The research was funded
by the National Institute of Mental Health;
the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports,
Science and Technology of Japan; and the
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.
Authors on the paper
are Masahiro Fukaya and Masahiko Watanabe
from Hokkaido University School of Medicine
and Hiroshi Nishiyama and Linden of Johns
Hopkins.
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